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Death Valley heat melts skin off a man's feet after he lost his flip-flops in the dunes

According to a National Park Service news release, the 42-year-old Belgian tourist was taking a short walk Saturday in the Mesquite Flat Sand Dunes in 123-degree heat when he either broke or lost his flip-flops, putting his feet into direct contact with the desert ground. The result: third-degree burns.

“The skin was melted off his foot,” said Death Valley National Park Service Ranger Gia Ponce. “The ground can be much hotter — 170, 180 [degrees]. Sometimes up into the 200 range.”

Unable to get out on his own and in extreme pain, the man and his family recruited other park visitors to help; together, the group carried him to the sand dunes parking lot, where park rangers assessed his injuries.

Though they wanted a helicopter to fly him out, helicopters can’t generate enough lift to fly in the heat-thinned air over the hottest parts of Death Valley, officials said. So park rangers summoned an ambulance that took him to higher ground, where it was a cooler 109 degrees and he could then be flown out.

skozzii ,

Dude is lucky he didn’t get a Darwin award…

nednobbins ,

People chronically underestimate nature.

They see some beautiful desert, a peaceful sea, or an idyllic mountain and assume that nothing so pretty could possible hurt you.

Forget about cute animals that are actually dangerous, any of the above can secretly store so much energy that humans are completely insignificant gnats, in comparison.

samus12345 ,
@samus12345@lemmy.world avatar

We’ve become spoiled by how much we’ve bent nature to accommodate us. We’re more fragile than we think.

Naz ,

I went on “a hike” with “a friend” (big quotation marks here because they’re no longer a friend obviously) that quickly turned into an unanchored free climb with no way back down with one another friend who was baked.

Our chance of significant injury or death was 90% at 2200 feet up, and we managed to get out of the climb and back down without so much as a twisted ankle. A literal fucking miracle.

When we went for food later, all I could talk about was how close we were to death, and how I’m never doing that again, but they seemed completely unfazed.

My best assumption? Brain worms.

Toxoplasmosis Gondii destroys the fear impulse in humans and causes them to engage in increasingly risky behavior, until it eventually kills them. It’s how the parasite procreates in mice (leading them to predators and wild cats).

samus12345 ,
@samus12345@lemmy.world avatar

Some people are just very bad at risk assessment. I’m glad you survived!

Cosmicomical ,

That’s the kind of shit i expect to happen in a place called death valley. I will only go if escorted by hokuto no ken

echodot ,

I went to Death Valley once on a tour and the minibus fell off the road. We had to open the door so that we could get some leverage so we could push it out of the small hole that it had fallen in and in the time that we had the door open the plastics on the door completely melted. We were all very hungover as well so it wasn’t really a very good experience.

some_guy ,

Terrible fates that I’d never considered for $100.

TheDeepState ,

People almost dying in “Death Valley”?

samus12345 ,
@samus12345@lemmy.world avatar

People die there every year. People aren’t too bright sometimes.

Grass ,

why do people keep going here. does nobody watch the local news there or is it all biden gone here’s herris, trunp maga pooble dooble and nothing actually local?

catloaf ,

The average person has become accustomed to no threats to their life. You know how they tell you not to feed wild animals, because they become accustomed to it and can’t fend for themselves? It’s like that.

newtraditionalists ,

A more cynical way I've seen this put: we've made it too easy for stupid people to survive.

FuglyDuck ,
@FuglyDuck@lemmy.world avatar

Technically, the reason they tell you not to feed wild animals is because they’re likely to maul you when you run out of food.

Hellnikko ,

The best part is no matter what health insurance he has (or doesn’t have), that’s gonna be expensive as fuck by the end of the year.

skuzz ,

Belgian. So probably no freedumb buck based medical system.

PixTupy ,

They don’t, you’re advised to buy the most expensive travel insurance you can find when going to USA or Canada.

Halcyon ,
@Halcyon@discuss.tchncs.de avatar

International travel health insurance is not that expensive in Europe. In Germany you can get it for the equivalent of around $15-20 a year. Then you are fully insured for a travel period of 8 weeks per year. Insurances like that also exist in Belgium.

PixTupy ,

True, I worked with travel insurance for a while in Euorpe. It’s still advised to get better coverage ones when going to North America, even several travel insurances, as the top amount in the cheapest ones will not be enough to even open an American hospital door.

AlecSadler ,

Don’t they do helicopter tours there? How does that work … and if/when it does, it seems like it’d be a dying industry…

echodot ,

Not in Death Valley as far as I’m aware, they do in the local area but not actually in Death Valley itself. I must admit though I’m a bit unclear about how far the really hot bit of Death Valley extends.

NauticalNoodle ,

If there are no relevant foot pictures in the article then it didn’t happen.

BeMoreCareful ,

I think you’re some kind of deviated prevert.

lemonmelon ,

I think the man currently lacks relevant feet…

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